Guys, I have made some positive progress. It's not 100% better - maybe 90% - but the problem has been significantly reduced. I switched the 220K power tube bias supply resistors and the PI plate resistors from the top of the board to the bottom, and vice-versa. This way, I was able to shorten the power tube grid wires quite a bit. It lengthened the PI plate wires. The distortion has been reduced - still present but not nearly as bad. This kind of proves that part of the issue IS some type of unwanted coupling. Later today I will take the earlier advice about moving the ground for the .1uf cap that connects to pin 7 of the PI and see if that also improves the situation. Regardless, I'm going to need to trace out the entire amp and find where the source of the remaining distortion resides. What I did helped the situation, but it's not the total solution. Something else has to be wrong - a stable amp doesn't go unstable unless something changes. It could be the board itself changing with age, it could be corrosion on that stupid brass ground strip, or a failed component somewhere else. The new scope ships today, from New Jersey to Ohio, so I should have it on Friday. As was suggested, I got the Rigol DS1052E. I know it's not a high-end scope, but it will do until i can afford to toss another couple of grand at a really good scope to replace my old HP scope (it was old, but man, was it cool! - I worked at HP for 40 years and one of my HP tech buddies hooked me up with the scope when HP was replacing older scopes with newer models). It did things that newer scope makers haven't even heard about doing...
To answer an earlier question, yes, I've changed the PI tube SEVERAL times. Always to a known-good tube, and it's never made any difference.
Even with the improvement in the situation, I'm still leaning toward a rebuild with a new board and a new grounding buss - I like to use a 12 gauge copper wire soldered to the back of the pots and chassis ground it near the input jacks. I need to get that old brass grounding plate out of the amp so I can check the grounds on the input jacks, and to do that I will have to do a lot of unsoldering. After all that work, it makes sense to me to go ahead and do the rebuild. The customer seems to be leaning that way now and I believe we've settled on a price.
So, even with the progress, I'm not totally satisfied, and I think a rebuild in the safest, long-term solution.
I will post again once the scope gets here and I've completed some traces...
